Upcoming Events

Executive conference

Cloud Connect March 16-18

Comprehensive thought leadership for executives, IT professionals and developers. Topics include: the ROI, cost and economics of on-demand computing; Migration strategies to move from on-premise to cloud-based IT; Vertical cloud specialization, tailoring features and architectures to specific applications, industries, and customer ecosystems

More Events »

Subscribe to Newsletter

  • Keep up with all of the latest news and analysis on the fast-moving IT industry with Network Computing newsletters.
Sign Up

 
NetNews
N E W S / A N A L Y S I S  


CDN Vendors Hope To Cache In

  May 15, 2003
  By Don MacVittie


TOC Issue TOC
Printer Print full article
Printer Download as PDF
E-Mail E-Mail this URL
Discuss Discuss this article
flame author Flame the author

If you're like me, the term content-delivery network conjures up the image of an auto company distributing streaming media to dealerships. After all, that type of application is typical for CDNs, but that market has languished in the past few years with flat growth.

CDN vendors haven't stood still, though, while their initial market dried up. Their products now include many features that appeal to the enterprise market.

At NetWorld+Interop last month, I checked out CDNs that offer such features as forced backup of remote clients, automated server-to-client updates of modified files and peer-to-peer updates of modified files.

Think about these in terms of remote offices. When changes are made to template documents, those updates can be propagated automatically to every office. If you have an office in charge of keeping a particular database up to date, the peer-to-peer features will let you set rules that will propagate those changes to all other offices automatically. If you have offices connected via slow links, like ISDN or dial-up, you can set rules to batch all changes up and submit them at specified intervals.

One vendor I spoke with, Enpia, will let you determine the level of synchronization you require. The company's product will even let you force OS files to remain synchronized on client machines. That means you will have more control over the machines in a remote office. Enpia even supports distributed updating, meaning you can set up one machine in the office as the "server" to receive distributed updates from your corporate data center, and that machine can then update all the other machines in the office.

Certainly there are many solutions available to address enterprise network issues, but to resolve them via a single package offered by a single CDN vendor is quite appealing.

Post a comment or question on this story.


Best of the Web

Data deduplication: Declawing the clones

Data deduplication is emerging as a critically important new arrow in the storage administrator's quiver to answer hard questions about the increasing problem in storage growth costs.

Quick Read

Compression, Encryption, Deduplication, and Replication: Strange Bedfellows

One of the great ironies of storage technology is the inverse relationship between efficiency and security: Adding performance or reducing storage requirements almost always results in reducing the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of a system.

Quick Read

WAN Optimization Whitelists and Blacklists

Optimization is a fantastic way of saving money and creating really happy customers at the same time, but it doesn't work flawlessly for all applications.

Quick Read

WAN Optimization as a Managed Service: It's Not About the Cost

This insight examines how organizations outsourcing their WAN optimization initiatives to a third-party go about achieving their goals for application performance, reducing operational costs, and streamlining enterprise infrastructure.

Quick Read

  Sponsored Links

Premium Content

Next Generation Data Center, Delivered, November 17th
NWC


Salary

Video